U.S. federal prosecutors suppressed
critical evidence in trial of 1993 World Trade Center bombers. According
to U.S. intelligence sources, the FBI and Justice Department sat on
volumes of translations of Arabic telephone intercepts gathered before
the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center from U.S.- and Sudan-based
Muslim militants who once worked for U.S. intelligence in the mujaheddin
war against the Soviet Union in Afghanistan. The critical intelligence,
which demonstrated a link between the CIA and "Afghan Arab"
muhajeddin forces, including those loyal to Osama bin Laden, was never
introduced into the trial of the Brooklyn- and Jersey City-based based
cell that included the blind Egyptian cleric Shaikh Omar Abdul Rahman,
Ramzi Yousef, and Eyad Ismail.. The New York and New Jersey cell also
included Ali Mohammed, a graduate of the U.S. Army's Special Forces
School at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, who, while an active duty member
of the Special Forces, secretly traveled to Afghanistan to train Bin
Laden's forces and provide special intelligence on U.S. "soft targets"
for terrorist attacks, and Wadih el-Hage, Osama bin Laden's personal
secretary, who was also a resident of the United States.

Some of the surveillance intelligence came from
decoded diplomatic communications between the Sudanese Mission to the
United Nations and Khartoum, Sudan, where Osama Bin Laden then resided.
While in Sudan, Bin Laden coordinated attacks on U.S. forces in Somalia
and Saudi Arabia. WMR previously reported that a classified French intelligence
report stated that Bin Laden and his Afghan forces remained under the
operational control of Britain's MI-6 and the CIA until 1995.

Ironically, the two men responsible for the
failure to present the surveillance intelligence on the 1993 World Trade
Center bombers to the juries and grand juries hearing the charges -- the
main federal prosecutors for New York City and New Jersey in the bombing
case -- were Patrick J. Fitzgerald and Michael Chertoff, respectively.

According to an FBI source, the chief FBI investigator
against Al Qaeda in the 1990s, the late John O'Neill, was upset that
the much of the telephone surveillance of the bombers was never introduced
as evidence and remained un-translated and classified.

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